| Literature DB >> 28012215 |
Kerstin Herzer1, Tania M Welzel2, Ulrich Spengler3, Holger Hinrichsen4, Hartwig Klinker5, Thomas Berg6, Peter Ferenci7, Markus Peck-Radosavljevic7,8, Akin Inderson9, Yue Zhao10, Maria Jesus Jimenez-Exposito10, Stefan Zeuzem2.
Abstract
Optimizing therapy of post-transplant HCV recurrence remains important, especially in advanced liver disease. We evaluated daclatasvir (DCV) plus sofosbuvir (SOF), with or without ribavirin (RBV), in patients with post-liver transplant recurrence in a real-world European cohort at high risk of decompensation or death within 12 months. Recommended treatment was DCV 60 mg plus SOF 400 mg once daily for 24 weeks; RBV use/shorter treatment duration was at physicians' discretion. Patients (N = 87) were 70% male, 93% white, and mostly infected with HCV genotypes 1b (48%), 1a (32%), or 3 (9%); 37 (43%) had cirrhosis (16 decompensated), five had fibrosing cholestatic hepatitis. Sustained virologic response at post-treatment week 12 (SVR12) was 94% (80/85) in a modified intention-to-treat analysis: 95% (58/61) without RBV and 92% (22/24) with RBV, with no virologic failures. SVR12 was 100% (80/80) in an as-observed analysis excluding five nonvirologic failures. Four patients (5%) discontinued therapy for adverse events (AEs); 16 (18%) experienced serious AEs. One patient died on treatment and five during follow-up. Most AEs were associated with advanced liver disease and unrelated to therapy. No clinically significant drug-drug interactions were observed. DCV + SOF ± RBV was well tolerated and achieved high SVR12 (94%) in patients with post-transplant HCV recurrence, including patients with severe liver disease.Entities:
Keywords: Decompensated; HCV therapy; fibrosing cholestatic hepatitis; liver transplant
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28012215 DOI: 10.1111/tri.12910
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transpl Int ISSN: 0934-0874 Impact factor: 3.782